August Art Auction – CLOSED

David MacGregor999 Club News

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August Art Auction - now closed

This is your chance to obtain a piece of original art at a bargain price and help the homeless at the same time. Seven artists have generously donated their work, so there are no reserve prices!

Three pieces have already been sold!

The auction is ‘silent’ so your bid will not be made public.

Here’s how it works:

If you’d like to own one of these pictures, send your bid to: sandrafile77@gmail.com

Your bid will stand unless, or until, a higher one is received. At this point you will be notified so you have the chance to increase your bid. Bidding will be open until the end of August.

All proceeds to the 999 Club.

Explore the artwork for sale below

Image

Suspended Harmony

by Kim Major-George


Collagraph with hand-embellished gold leaf

Dimensions: Central artwork 38x39cm with mount 58x59.5cm

“This spiritual image depicts the flow of Chi which is all around us - a flow of love, which I send to the people who are on the margins of life.”

majorgeorge.co.uk

Image

Canada Water Café

by M Antoniou

Oil on Canvas 60x80cm

Image

Flowers on a Patterned Cloth

by Penny Figgis

Oil on Paper

21 x 17 cm, with mount 38 x 28 cm

Artworks4you.co.uk

Image

Eclipse

by Rachel McCulloch

Mixed Media

60 x 30 cm

rachelmcculloch.co.uk

Image

Turning Tide

by Angela Clabburn

Pastel on paper

50 x 30 cm

Image

Seaspray

by Julie Wigg

Oil on canvas

24 x 30 cm, with hand-painted wood frame 40 x 34 cm

juliewiggartist.co.uk

Image

Looking the Other Way

by James Whittaker

Giclee print on Hahnemühle Photo Rag paper

Dimensions: 24" x 16" (60.96 cm x 40.64 cm

“Like everyone else present, my attention and camera lens followed the focus of the television camera, into which the Metropolitan Police Chief spoke. With increasing numbers of mobile phone cameras joining in, it was only once I moved away from the crowd that I saw the man in the photograph.

The photo aims to provoke thought about key issues surrounding homelessness, particularly isolation and the half-willful blindness that we are each prone to, made more relevant by the recent development of the Black Lives Matter movement.”

www.wildwalden.com